Abstract

Kinetics and mechanism of nitrate ion reduction on Pt(1 1 1) and Cu-modified Pt(1 1 1) electrodes have been studied by means of cyclic voltammetry, potentiostatic current transient technique and in situ FTIRS in solutions of perchloric and sulphuric acids to elucidate the role of the background anion. Modification of platinum surface with copper adatoms or small amount of 3D-Cu crystallites was performed using potential cycling between 0.05 and 0.3 V in solutions with low concentration of copper ions, this allowed us to vary coverage θ Cu smoothly. Following desorption of copper during the potential sweep from 0.3 to 1.0 V allowed us to estimate actual coverage of Pt surface with Cu adatoms. Another manner of the modification was also applied: copper was electrochemically deposited at several constant potentials in solutions containing 10 −5 or 10 −4 M Cu 2+ and 5 mM NaNO 3 with registration of current transients of copper deposition and nitrate reduction. It has been found that nitrate reduction at the Pt(1 1 1) surface modified by copper adatoms in sulphuric acid solutions is hindered as compared to pure platinum due to induced sulphate adsorption at E < 0.3 V. Sulphate blocks the adsorption sites on the platinum surface and/or islands of epitaxial Cu(1 × 1) monolayer thus hindering the adsorption of nitrate anions and their reduction. The extent of inhibition weakly depends on the copper adatom coverage. Deposition of a small amount of bulk copper does not affect noticeably the rate of nitrate reduction. Nitrate reduction on copper-modified Pt(1 1 1) electrodes in perchloric acid solutions occurs much faster as compared to pure platinum. The steady-state currents are higher by 4 and 2 orders of magnitude at the potentials of 0.12 and 0.3 V, respectively. The catalytic effect of copper adatoms is largely caused by the facilitation of nitrate adsorption on the platinum surface near Cu ad and/or on the islands of the Cu(1 × 1) monolayer (induced nitrate adsorption). Hydrogen adatoms block the adsorption sites on platinum for NO 3 − anion adsorption and inhibit reactions of nitrate reduction even at moderate surface coverage. The products of nitrate reduction in sulphuric and perchloric acids are essentially the same (NO and ammonia) irrespective of the presence or absence of Cu on the platinum surface.

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